CREDOS IV
Credos IV is a book-as-exhibition, the fourth in an ongoing series of displays of artworks that elaborate on notions of belief (see below). It was launched February 3rd, 2022 at articule artist run centre.
The 5 inch by 8 inch books are 150 pages in black and white with colour inserts. Each comes with handmade hardwood frames, individually covered in textile, which the books can easily slip in and out of (back and front covers offering different choices of image by the painter Mina Hedayat). Credos IV can be hung on a nail or fit on a shelf, and look nice on their own or in clusters. They come in a numbered edition of 200.
With contributions from Lea Cetera, Mina Hedayat, Craig Leonard & Michael Fernandes, Jones Miller, Pak Sheung Chuen, Jeanne Randolph, Alessandro Rolandi, Jamie Ross, and others.
They are priced at $30 and can be found at the following locations, with more distributors forthcoming:
Articule (Montreal)
Art Metropole (Toronto)
Axenéo7 (Gatineau)
Canadian Centre for Architecture bookstore (Montreal)
La Fonderie Darling (Montreal)
Librairie le Port de Tête (Montreal)
Verticale — centre d’artistes (Laval)
Credos is a series of exhibitions that started off as table-top group mini-exhibitions conceived for church-basement bazaars in Laval and Greater Montreal throughout 2019–20. The first two editions took place in different Armenian congregations in Laval. When the COVID-19 pandemic put subsequent Québec editions on hold, a version was transported to Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, and shown in the frame of the all-day public art festival “Art in the Open” in 2020. An 8-hour online radio program was broadcast alongside the tabletop displays.
Credos IV is also a response to social distance, but at the same time a furthering of an inquiry into the substitutions and translations of an exhibition into non-gallery spaces.
See more about previous editions here.
published Ferbuary 17th, 2022
(photo Michael McCormack)
The below text was included in a zine called “Preposterous Portability,” put together by Hannah Jickling and Helen Reed’s class at the School Of Visual Art (SOVA) in Dawson City, Yukon, in dialogue with the “Readymade Institution” class instructed by Michael McCormack and Michael Eddy at NSCAD University. Hannah and Helen’s class collected the contributions that addressed the theme of portable and alternative gallery space (as did our course), and assembled them into printed form with a limited run, including screen-printed covers, in February 2021.
published April 14th, 2021
Je Suis was my first large scale solo exhibition. It opened at the Fonderie Darling on February 28th, 2020, went on pause after two weeks because of the Covid 19 pandemic, reopened in July, then closed for good at the end of August 2020.
This exhibition gathered together several threads of work that I had been pursuing since moving to Montreal.
First, a series of large Styrofoam engravings on Tyvek paper were arranged around the space, mounted on nylon strapping stretched across metal frames.
The second thread was a number of leather figures scattered in the negative spaces of the print installation, as well as interacting with parts of the installation. These figures, called “armchair participants” had been made of leather from discarded couches found throughout the city. Two of them were still attached to chairs.
The third thread was three videos in different parts of the space. One of them was a wall projection of the video Infinite Cruelty, for nothing (2016), viewable from a cluster of foldable leather camp chairs.
Extremities (2020) is a three-channel video that was shown on plasma screens inside of a suspended black box, held up by a pair of armchair participants. Each of the video’s three screens is the perspective of one particular still camera: pinhole, 35 mm and digital SLR. They interact in intimate and sexualized ways, as whispering voices discuss whether and how to make a hidden free space into a public life.
Coercion (2020) was projected from the mouth of an armchair participant. This video was made from my grandfather’s super-8 mm films that he had shot from the 1930s to the 1960s. I extracted all the moments I could find where someone was being manipulated for the camera by another person, or by the camera itself.
These three threads reflected different modes of publicness or disguise, within an overall motif of freedom of expression. The rough aesthetic of the prints’ overt and pedantic quality (to my mind) recalls medieval wood cuts but also populist printmaking and editorial cartoons. The show’s title indeed refers to the campaign of solidarity following the 2015 murders of the Charlie Hebdo cartoonists in Paris. In a local context, the installation was informed by Quebec’s adoption of Bill 21, which ostensibly promotes secularism by “prohibit[ing] certain persons from wearing religious symbols while exercising their functions.” The means and uses of the body for expressing one’s place in society was a recurrent theme among the prints.
The videos, on the other hand, played with the tension between disguise and identity, where narratives of freedom and agency are found in situations of dissemblance and role play.
In my thinking, the leather armchair participants took on a sort of an intermediary role between the videos and the prints, bridges between self-representation in society, and the internal questions about who we actually are. They obviously reference particular sexual subcultures, but they are also skins to try on, viewpoints to adopt vicariously; or protective suits, almost post-apocalyptic.
This text, realized for the second issue of HomeShop’s Wear journal (2010), was the culmination of a series of zines I had produced in printshops around central Beijing in 2009. The approach was similar to those zines, where most of the images were found on the print shop’s hard drives or made with their software, sometimes with the help of the clerks, and assembled in one night and printed in the early hours. For this text, however, I saved my work on the computers of a specific print shop, returning there consistently over several visits. Through this text I was attempting to describe an imaginary place called “the conceptual youth hostel,” where the conversion of experiences into fixed values was suspended.
See the PDF here: Conceptual-Youth Hostel_2010_Michael-Eddy
(Cleaning out data, I recently came across another trace of this project that couldn’t be included in the printed publication, which was that in the danwei housing compound in the Tuanjiehu (团结湖, literally “Solidarity Lake”) neighbourhood of Beijing where I lived, I had posted the pages on the local notice board.)
published June 13th, 2020
“Wendel’s Institution: the live podcast” is the storytelling performance recounting the 10-year process of collaborative writing between Michael Eddy and his uncle Alex Kreger, which was called “Wendel’s Institution.”
The live podcast streamed on April 30th, 2020.
Watch or listen to the archived stream here:
Wendel’s Institution: the live podcast
The performance was realized within the frame of Michael Eddy’s exhibition “Je suis,” at Fonderie Darling.
More information about the performance is available here: https://fonderiedarling.org/en/Wendels-Institution-The-Podcast.html
published May 9th, 2020
I was honoured to be included in a mini survey of 10 artists across Canada cobbled together in “Resonant Signals” for the Spring 2020 issue of Canadianart by the intrepid Joni Low.
published April 12, 2020